82
Registres de recensement
17
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 44
- Foyers
- 9
- Personnes
- 38 -13.6%
- Foyers
- 8 -11.1%
À propos
Drumlurgagh is a townland located in County Donegal in the northwest of Ireland, situated within the broader landscape of the county's rural hinterland. The townland name derives from Irish, with "Drum" referring to a ridge or hill, which reflects the undulating terrain characteristic of this part of Donegal. The area is positioned in a region of the county known for its pastoral farming landscape, interspersed with small settlements and traditional stone walls that divide the fields. The broader Donegal landscape features moorland, bogland, and rolling hills that create a distinctive natural environment shaped by both geology and centuries of human land use.
Like many Irish townlands, Drumlurgagh represents a fundamental unit of local geographic and social organization with deep historical roots. Townlands in Ireland emerged from ancient divisions of land and were formalized during various periods of settlement and administration. County Donegal's townlands reflect the region's complex history, including early Christian settlement, medieval land divisions, and the impact of English colonial administration. Drumlurgagh, as a named place within this system, would have been significant to local people for centuries as a recognizable territorial unit associated with particular families, farms, and community networks.
The townland, like much of rural Donegal, would have been home to farming families whose livelihoods depended on the land. The landscape itself—with its particular soil conditions, drainage patterns, and climate—shaped the type of agriculture possible in the area, typically involving sheep and cattle grazing alongside smaller-scale cultivation. Stone walls, field patterns, and scattered house sites visible in the landscape are physical reminders of sustained human habitation and land management across generations. Such townlands form the fabric of rural Irish identity and continue to serve as important reference points for residents and families with ancestral connections to the area.
Today, Drumlurgagh remains part of the living geography of County Donegal, retaining its significance as a townland designation used in local administration, genealogical research, and community identity. For people with family roots in the area, townland names carry considerable personal and historical meaning, connecting individuals to specific places and ancestral histories. The townland represents one of countless similar rural communities across Ireland where traditional settlement patterns and land organization persist, offering insight into how Irish rural life has been structured and sustained over centuries.
Source: AI generated
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